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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 241: R50-R54, 1981;
0363-6119/81 $5.00
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AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Vol 241, Issue 1 50-R54, Copyright © 1981 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Coronary circulation in hearts from hibernating, normothermic, and cold-acclimated hamsters

G. F. Merrill, J. T. White and L. W. Krieger

We have investigated the influence of temperature, acute global ischemia, adenosine administration, and alterations in perfusion pressure on the coronary circulation of isolated, perfused spontaneously beating hearts from hibernating, normothermic, and cold-acclimated (nonhibernating) hamsters. No differences in heart rates were observed among groups at either 9 or 38 degrees C. Hearts from hibernating hamsters showed some differences in autoregulatory capacity at both the low and normal temperatures. All hearts exhibited similar responses to 30 s of global ischemia at both temperatures, with a marked reduction in the response at 9 degrees C. Similarly, the magnitude of the vasculature response to adenosine (250 micrograms) at 38 and 9 degrees C was equal in both normothermic and hibernating hearts perfused at 38 degrees C. Responses were abolished in all groups at 9 degrees C. We conclude that the altered ability of hibernating hearts to autoregulate is possibly due to intrinsic differences initiated by hibernation, while the responses to adenosine, and global ischemia are largely temperature-dependent effects.





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